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Have a wonderful trip and visit, rapa. We will be spending Thanksgiving with our 2 daughters in the Twin Cities and watching our grandson on TV in the Macy's day parade. He plays the Baritone with the 270 member Greendale Marching Band. Might be hard to pick him out of the crowd... LOL
Forgot to mention one of my Oct. reads in my last post... Home by Harlan Coben. I always enjoy his Myron Bolitar series, witty and always a surprise at the end. This is no different. The last paragraph brought a tear to my eye as well.
I am now struggling through another Julia Keller novel: Bitter River. While I enjoy the stories, she is the queen of similes and about 1/2 way through the book I want to just scream (like a child that has had too much teasing!) "Enough already! Just get back to the plot"
I just finished a rather quirky book that may, or may not, appeal to you. It's called The Leisure Seeker and was written by Michael Zadoorian. I can't remember how I found it, and never heard of the author. It was his second book and was published in 2009. Anyway, it is the story of Ella and John, married almost 60 years, and now in declining health. He has Alzheimer's and she has cancer. Ella decides they need to take one last road trip in their Leisure Seeker (evidently there used to be an RV by that name) and go to Disneyland. They live in Michigan and everyone, their adult children and their doctors forbid the very idea. BUT Ella kidnaps John and they are off on their final adventure.
For whatever reason, I just loved this book. It was so honest, believable and most of all brave. How many of us would have the courage to take such a trip?? To retake control of our lives when other people, especially our children and doctors, have started making decisions for us?!
I read this book as well and liked it right up to the end... which I thought was selfish and a horrible slap in the face to their children...
Although I rarely like to see days and weeks come to an end (life is just too short for that) but October was an exception. On the first day of the month, I attended a memorial service in Chicago for a good friend who had passed away several days earlier in Florida. That was followed in mid-month by a visit with a sister-in-law who was in a hospice dying of cancer. That was followed a week or so later by her funeral. Three trips in just one month, driving from Minnesota to Chicago and to the Milwaukee area-roughly 350 miles each way. I am ready to relax at home for a while. But enough of that.
I didn’t stop reading, but it was greatly curtailed. I pretty much stuck to non fiction, where you don’t need to follow a story from beginning to end. The books included The Accidental Universe by Alan Lightman, The Whole Shebang by Timothy Ferris and The Philosopher and the Wolf by Mark Rowlands. They all helped me get my mind off that awful October.
I am now next in line on my library hold list for Razor Girl by Carl Hiaasen. If any writer can cheer me up and make me laugh again, it is Hiaasen.
I am desperate for a good mystery! I read (listened to) the Whistler -- found it pretty good, but I was 50% into the book before it became interesting. I only stuck with it because I was waiting for the new Reacher to be released -- and then it got terrible reviews on Audible. The Wrong Side of Goodbye - another Harry Bosch novel - was a good read, better than some of the recent Bosch novels. Stuart Woods - Sex, Lies, & Serious Money -- borrrring!! I always love the Virgil Flowers novels - and Escape Clause was a good listen as well. The Seventh Canon by Robert Dugoni was a change of pace and I thought it was worth the time. I thought Chasing Fire by Nora Roberts gave a very good view of the brave firefighters in the forest. Maybe I will try Razor Girl - I will at least get to tickle my funny bone. I so rarely write -- so I will wish you all a Happy Thanksgiving. Today is Veteran's Day - I am from the Viet Nam era and I ache for our boys lost and never given an even break when they came home.
Glenda, I enjoyed HOME by Harlan Coben; a Myron Bolitar novel. Action, mystery and witty dialogue. It kept me guessing right up to the end and I loved the ending.
I had my old computer crash and burn on me about 3 weeks ago and had to recover the password on this site but I'm hooked back in now. My reading schedule has been full with books like "The Whistler," "Two by Two," "Home" etc keeping me up on the best seller listings. But I visited an old friend this past week: Elizabeth George. I read her 19th novel set in England: "A Banquet of Consequences."Checking back to when she started the series, I have been a fan for 38 years. https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/22571556-a-banquet-of-consequences Absolutely nobody does the British patois better than she does as she wallows in the local culture and presents a totally dysfunctional cast of characters.
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